Friday, April 26, 2019

Early Christianity on: The Personification of God the Father (Full Script)

Too lazy to read?  Watch the video!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=NTkRfKnCn1g


Early Christianity on the Personification of God the Father
Post-Apostolic Church
INTRO
This is the twelfth video in a series on what the Pre-Nicene Christians believed about the Divinity.  And this is the ninth video about God the Father.

The last video explained the invisibility of God the Father and how no one has ever seen Him and how no one can see Him.  But if no one has seen or can see the Father, then what about those times when the Scriptures describe God in physical or human-like ways?  When non-human things or abstract concepts are given human attributes, this is called anthropomorphism, or personification.  Some examples of personification include: “My car died yesterday” or, “The sunrise smiles at me and welcomes a new day” or, “He realized that opportunity was knocking at the door.”

What have we heard about the personification of God?  Some might say, “God has taken physical form in things such as a cloud, smoke, or wind.”  Others might say, “God is spirit but is able to act similarly to mankind.”  Others might say, “God has a body.”  Others might say, “Any manifestation of God is not physical or literal but is personification.”

PRE-NICENE CHRISTIANS: GOD THE FATHER IS IN NO WAY PHYSICAL
The early Christians believed that when the Scriptures describe God the Father in physical or human-like ways, these were not to be taken literally but are personification.  For example, one of the earliest personifications of God is found in Genesis 3,

Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden at the time of the evening breeze, and they hid themselves from the Lord God among the trees of the garden.  (Gen 3:8)

The early Christians believed that this description of God was not to be taken literally but was written this way so that humans can better understand what God does.  Aristides wrote,

I say, then, that God is not born, not made, an ever-abiding nature without beginning and without end, immortal, perfect, and incomprehensible….  He has no form, nor any union of members.  For whatsoever possesses these is kindred to things fashioned.  He is neither male nor female.  (Aristides.  AD 125.  ANF, vol 9, page 263-264.)
(http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf09.xiii.iv.html, “I say, then, that God…”)

Justin Martyr wrote about religious shrines and images,

[These do] not have the form of God.  For we do not consider that God has such a form as some say that they imitate [or fashion] in His honor.  (Justin Martyr.  AD 160.  ANF, vol 1, page 165.)

Clement of Alexandria wrote,

Form and motion, or standing, or a throne, or place, or right hand or left, are not at all to be conceived as belonging to the Father of the universe, although it is so written.  But what each of these means will be shown in its proper place.  The First Cause [that is, God the Father] is not then in space, but above both space, and time, and name, and conception.  (Clement of Alexandria.  AD 195.  ANF, vol 2, page 461.)
(http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf02.vi.iv.v.xi.html, “If, then, abstracting all…”)

Perhaps Novatian explained it best, writing,

Although the heavenly Scripture often turns the divine appearance into a human form,—as when it says, “The eyes of the Lord are over the righteous;” [Ps 34:15] or when it says, “The Lord God smelled the smell of a good savor;” [Gen 8:21] or when there are given to Moses the tables “written with the finger of God;” [Ex 31:18] or when the people of the children of Israel are set free from the land of Egypt “with a mighty hand and with a stretched out arm;” [Ps 136:12] or when it says, “The mouth of the Lord has spoken these things;” [Is 1:20] or when the earth is set forth as “God’s footstool;” [Is 66:1] or when it says, “Incline Your ear, and hear…,” [2Chr 19:16] [and,]  “If I shall ascend into heaven, You are there; if I shall descend into hell [that is, Hades], You are there also; and if I shall take my wings, and go away across the sea, there Your hand shall lay hold of me, and Your right hand shall hold me.” [Ps 139:8-10]  For we recognize the plan of the divine Scripture according to the proportion of its arrangement.  For the prophet then was still speaking about God in parables according to the period of the faith, not as God was, but as the people were able to receive Him.  And thus, that such things as these should be said about God, must be imputed not to God, but rather to the people.  Thus the people are permitted to erect a tabernacle, and yet God is not contained within the enclosure of a tabernacle.  Thus a temple is reared, and yet God is not at all bound within the restraints of a temple.  Therefore, it is not God who is limited, but the perception of the people is limited; nor is God cramped, but the understanding of the reason of the people is held to be cramped....  For why should He require eyes who is Himself the light?  Or why should He ask for feet who is everywhere?  Or why should He wish to go when there is nowhere where He can go beyond Himself?  Or why should He seek for hands whose will is, even when silent, the architect for the foundation of all things?  He needs no ears who knows the wills that are even unexpressed.  Or for what reason should He need a tongue whose thought is a command?   These members assuredly were necessary to men, but not to God....  Moreover, He Himself is all eye because He all sees, and all ear because He all hears, and all hand because He all works, and all foot because He all is everywhere.  (Novatian.  AD 235.  ANF, vol 5, page 615-616.)

Origen wrote,

With regard to such a style of speaking about God, we find in the book of Deuteronomy the following: “The Lord your God bear with your manners, as a man would bear with the manners of his son.” *  It is, as it were, assuming the manners of a man in order to secure the advantage of men [that is, so that they can understand it] that the Scripture makes use of such expressions.  For it would not have been suitable to the condition of the multitude, that what God had to say to them should be spoken by Him in a manner more befitting the majesty of His own person.  (Origen.  AD 248.  ANF, vol 4, page 529.)
* Deut 1:31

Arnobius wrote,

If you are willing to hear our conclusions, then learn that we are so far from attributing bodily shape to the Deity, that we fear to ascribe to so great a being even mental graces, and the very excellences by which a few have been allowed with difficulty to distinguish themselves. For who will say that God is brave, firm, good, wise? who will say that He has integrity, is temperate, even that He has knowledge, understanding, forethought? that He directs towards fixed moral ends the actions on which He determines? These things are good in man; and being opposed to vices, have deserved the great reputation which they have gained. But who is so foolish, so senseless, as to say that God is great by merely human excellences...?  Whatever you say, whatever in unspoken thought you imagine concerning God, passes and is corrupted into a human sense, and does not carry its own meaning, because it is spoken in the words which we use, and which are suited only to human affairs. There is but one thing man can be assured of regarding God’s nature, to know and perceive that nothing can be revealed in human language concerning God.  (Arnobius.  AD 305.  ANF, vol 6, page 469.)

One of the most frequent ways the Scriptures personify God is by referring to Him in the masculine, calling God a “He.”  The early Christians did not believe this is literal but is personification as well.  Arnobius wrote,

That no thoughtless person may raise a false accusation against us, as though we believed God whom we worship to be male (that is, for this reason that when we speak of Him we use a masculine word), let him understand that it is not sex which is expressed, but His name and its meaning according to custom and the way in which we are in the habit of using words.  For the Deity is not male, but His name is of the masculine gender.  (Arnobius.  AD 305.  ANF, vol 6, page 466.)

SCRIPTURES: GOD IS INVISIBLE AND IS SPIRIT
What do the Scriptures say?  The Scriptures do not address the personification of God explicitly, but they seem to address it implicitly.  For example, Paul wrote,

His [God the Father’s] invisible attributes, that is, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen since the creation of the world, being understood through what He has made.  (Rom 1:20)

God said,

For My thoughts are not your thoughts, and your ways are not My ways.  For as the heaven is higher than earth, so My ways are higher than your ways, and My thoughts than your thoughts.  (Is 55:8-9)

Paul wrote,

To the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only God, be honor and glory forever and ever.  Amen.  (1Tim 1:17)

Jesus said,

God is spirit.  (John 4:24)

Paul wrote,

He [the Son] is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation.  (Col 1:15)

GOD REPENTS
There is one personification of God that has troubled Christians for ages.  This is when the Scriptures speak of God repenting.  One example is when God repented that He had made Saul king.  He also said He will not repent about the upcoming division of the kingdom.

The word of the Lord came to Samuel, saying, “I have repented that I have made Saul to be king; for he has turned back from following Me, and has not kept My word….”  Samuel said to him [Saul], “The Lord has rent your kingdom from Israel out of your hand this day, and will give it to your neighbor who is better than you.  And Israel will be divided into two.  And God will not turn nor repent; for He is not as a man to repent.”  (1Sam 15:10-11, 15:28-29)

Did God sin and then repent of it?  Absolutely not, since this would be against God’s perfect goodness, which was discussed in a previous video.  Tertullian brings our attention to the actual meaning of the original word: repent.  He wrote,

And it now remains that we should understand what God’s repentance means.  For although man repents most frequently on the recollection of a sin, and occasionally even from the unpleasantness of some good action, this is never the case with God….  Then what will be the mode of God’s repentance?  It is already quite clear, if you avoid referring it to human conditions.  For it will have no other meaning than a simple change of a prior purpose.  And this is admissible without any blame even in a man, much more in God, whose every purpose is faultless.  Now in Greek the word for repentance is formed, not from the confession of a sin, but from a change of mind.  (Tertullian.  AD 207.  ANF, vol 3, page 316.)
(http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf03.v.iv.iii.xxiv.html)

Whether one says that God repents—or its more accurate meaning: that God changes His mind—these are personifications that help us understand God’s will for people.

CONCLUSION
And this personification of God repenting should be a reason to bring real joy and gratitude into our lives.  For God can decree punishment on people …but later repent!  God said,

If I pronounce a decree upon a nation, or upon a kingdom, to cut them off, and to destroy them, and that nation turns from all their sins, then I will repent of the evils which I purposed to do to them.  (Jer 18:8-10, LXX)

In the book of Jonah,

Jonah began to enter into the city [of Nineveh] about a day’s journey, and he proclaimed, and said, “Yet three days, and Nineveh will be overthrown….”  So men and cattle were clothed in sackcloth, and cried earnestly to God.  And they turned everyone from their evil way, and from the iniquity that was in their hands, saying, “Who knows if God will repent, and turn from His fierce anger, and so we will not perish?”  And God saw their works, that they turned from their evil ways.  And God repented of the evil which He had said He would do to them.  And He did not do it.  (Jonah 3:4, 3:8-10)

God does not repent or change His mind as we humans understand it.  These personifications help us understand what God can do.  Christians should find joy and gratitude in the fact that our God is a God who personifies repentance, which He gives to us in eternal love and compassion—just as God had done for the city of Nineveh!

The early Christians’ belief in the personification of God is very closely tied to their belief in the invisibility of God.  And in turn, these two beliefs are very closely tied to their belief about the emotions of God, which will be discussed in the next video.

Blessings and so forth.

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